Haha....so the way I found out about this was that I used to give rides to an elderly man who couldn't drive. I stopped after he wasn't well enough to leave his nursing home anymore. Since that time, people often started a conversation with me asking about how this elderly guy was, or if I had seen him, etc. It really annoyed me, since I am not in contact with this man, I don't know how he's doing, etc (not to sound like a jerk, but I really wasn't), and I hated always having to talk about how I don't know what's going on in his life (I stopped driving him years ago). I kept thinking, "If they're so interested, why on earth don't they just pick up the phone and calling him to see how he's doing? Why don't they visit him themselves?" My husband then explained to me that they were just trying to find common ground to start a light conversation: this was the only thing these people really knew about me, so that was the starting point they were jumping from. They weren't truly seeking for me to provide an update on him, but rather they just wanted to get me talking a little, just chit-chat about whatever topic we might get to after the obligatory opening. OR, it was just a friendly conversational acknowledgement of seeing me, like a greeting beyond "hello". Totally surprised me - but since then, I have noticed this same phenomenon with other topics. And I feel less annoyed when I think of it that way. Now that these same people know more about me, they no longer start conversations asking me about the elderly man, because they have more common ground to jump from.
Last edited by Maple78 on 23 Mar 2016, 6:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.